A new appraisal of the military careers and activities of soldiers from
elite medieval families.
In 1277 the recently crowned king of England, Edward I, invaded Wales;
his army, large for the time, was none the less modest by his later
standards. Most of his countrymen had not been on active service outside
the realm for twenty years and more, if at all, yet over the course of
the following four decades, up to the battle of Bannockburn in 1314,
they would be called upon to fight in four different theatres of war: in
Wales, Gascony, Flanders and Scotland.
Although the identities of many of the men who fought in these wars,
particularly those of the thousands of peasant foot soldiers, will never
be known, the names of a large proportion of the men-at-arms can be
located inthe records of central government. This book utilises these
sources - pay-rolls, horse inventories, wardrobe books and others - to
examine the military careers and activities of these men-at-arms,
focusing on five main themes: mobilisation; military command; service
patterns among the gentry; retinues and their composition; and 'feudal'
service.
Dr DAVID SIMPKIN is Teacher of History at Birkenhead Sixth-Form College.